Mick and Keith and Thomas
David Casseres
david.casseres at gmail.com
Sun Jul 30 13:30:55 CDT 2006
I like Keith a lot, but have to agree that his greatest strength is
not in his fingers. A few years back there was a good TV feature
about Chuck Berry, and in one of the scenes he was hanging out with
Keith, who was probably stoned. Chuck kept trying to teach Keith a
lick that sounded very simple when Chuck played it, but Keith just
could not get the rhythm of it. (And speaking of rock visionaries,
Chuck Berry may have been the greatest of them all.)
On 7/28/06, Joe Allonby <joeallonby at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> On 7/26/06, MalignD at aol.com <MalignD at aol.com> wrote:
> >
> >
> > I can't see Keith as great outside the band he ended up in. His solo
> efforts
> > were forgetable and his guitar playing is terrific within the context of
> the
> > Stones but, more broadly, he's not particularly versatile. The Stones
> always
> > had two guitarists, always needed two guitarists, and I don't know any
> > guitarist who thinks Keith was a better player than Mick Taylor, although,
> in the
> > Stones, he's clearly more important. I mean, I like Keith, but I don't
> get your
> > placing him on the rung you're placing him on.
>
>
>
> OK, here goes. During the slow demise of Brian Jones, Keith Richards was to
> all intents and purposes the only guitarist in the Rolling Stones. He
> credits this in an interview in Guitar Player in1977 with the development of
> his open-tuned style.
>
> He started using alternate tunings in an attempt to recreate the fullness of
> two guitars while only playing one, but without obvious studio trickery. Try
> playing the intro to Happy while tuned D-G-D-G-B-D low to high. You'll need
> a capo at the fifth fret. See how full that sounds, like more than one
> guitar? Now listen to the song (or any of the others that I mentioned) and
> listen to the arrangements. This is where the man's genius lies, not in how
> fast he can blow riffs out of his fingers. He may be a drug addicted zombie
> but he's a rock 'n' roll rhythm guitar virtuoso who knows how all of the
> pieces fit together. He's not much of a dancer.
>
> Ironically, I've heard Keith Richards praise Prince for the same skills.
>
>
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